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Situated at the far western tip of Texas, El Paso is a main gateway to Mexico. It lies at the foot of the Franklin Mountains, below a narrow pass where the Rio Grande emerges from the southernmost spurs of the Rocky Mountains. El Paso is the second largest of the United States–Mexican border cities, after San Diego. The Mexican city of Ciudad Juárez is just across the Rio Grande.

El Paso is a modern metropolis, though it still has old adobe buildings that are distinctively Mexican. Many scenic areas are nearby, including the Carlsbad Caverns and Big Bend national parks as well as several old Spanish missions. The University of Texas at El Paso was founded in 1913 as the Texas State School of Mines and Metallurgy. It is the site of the Sun Bowl college football game.

El Paso is the commercial and financial center for an extensive trade territory. Its manufacturing industries produce machinery, electronics, vehicle parts, medical devices, electric motors, metals, food products, and clothing. The economy of El Paso is tied to that of Ciudad Juárez through the maquiladora industry. Factories, or maquiladoras, in Juárez manufacture goods using parts produced in the United States. Many of the parts are made in or shipped through El Paso. Oil refining, livestock ranching, and cotton farming are also important to El Paso.

As in the United States as a whole, services surpassed manufacturing to become the most valuable part of El Paso’s economy in the late 20th and early 21st centuries. Health care, business services (such as call centers), tourism, and government are key components of El Paso’s service sector. Government employment includes the federal and state agencies that manage the international border as well as Fort Bliss, home of the United States Army Air Defense Center. In addition, the White Sands Missile Range is nearby in New Mexico.

The strategic value of the site of El Paso was recognized in 1598 by Juan de Oñate, the colonizer of New Mexico. He claimed the land for Spain. Franciscans established the Mission of Guadalupe (now in Ciudad Juárez) in 1659. Spanish survivors of the Pueblo Indian revolt of 1680 took refuge there and built other missions nearby, including one at Ysleta, site of the oldest town in Texas (now in El Paso).

In 1827 a village developed at the present site of El Paso, and it became a United States territory in 1848 when an Army post was built. The town was laid out in 1859. Four railways arrived in 1881, and by 1890 the population had increased more than ten times—to 10,338. Long-standing border disputes between the United States and Mexico were finally resolved in 1967. Population (2010) 649,121; metropolitan area (2010) 800,647.

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